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Cardinals rout Nationals, reduce magic number to three

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Nine runs in 1 1-3 innings said it all. The St. Louis Cardinals took all the suspense out of a matchup of teams on the cusp of clinchers. Even in a wipeout loss, the Washington Nationals took

ST. LOUIS (AP) -- Nine runs in 1 1/3 innings said it all. The St. Louis Cardinals took all the suspense out of a matchup of teams on the cusp of clinchers.

Even in a wipeout loss, the Washington Nationals took away a big positive.

Allen Craig matched his career best with four hits to go with two RBIs, Yadier Molina hit a two-run home run and the Cardinals punished Edwin Jackson in a 12-2 victory Friday night to reduce their magic number for clinching the second wild-card berth to three.

"I think our team's coming together nicely," St. Louis starter Adam Wainwright said. "We've been playing good ball for the last few weeks and we're going to be a very dangerous team if we get in there. When we get in there.

"Hopefully it happens sooner rather than later."

Roger Bernadina homered and Bryce Harper had his fourth consecutive multi-hit game for Washington, which saw its magic number for wrapping up the NL East cut to two when Atlanta lost to the Mets. The Nationals, who secured the first postseason berth for Washington, D.C., since 1933 a week earlier, lead the Braves by four games with five to play and could wrap up the division title Saturday night.

"That was a beating tonight, but we're obviously watching the scoreboard," the Nationals' Adam LaRoche said. "The Braves finally lost a game this month, so I guess we can take that as a positive."

Wainwright (14-13) halted a string of four so-so starts with six solid innings for the Cardinals. The defending World Series champions have won nine of 11 overall, and 11 of their last 12 at home against Washington since 2008.

St. Louis' win also eliminated Arizona from contention for a wild-card spot.

Jordan Zimmerman (12-8, 2.90) faces the Cardinals' Kyle Lohse (16-3, 2.77) in the second game of a three-game series.

"This is a good team we're playing," Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said. "But we're a pretty good team, too."

The Nationals and Cincinnati Reds, who got a no-hitter from Homer Bailey in a 1-0 victory over the Pirates, are tied for the league's best record at 95-62. The team with the best overall record will open the NL division series on the road against the winner of a one-game playoff between the wild card teams.

Jackson (9-11) left trailing 9-1 after just 1 1/3 innings, his shortest outing of the season, in his first start in St. Louis since leaving as a free agent. Jackson was 5-2 with a 3.58 ERA down the stretch last fall, helping the Cardinals earn the wild card on the final day of the season, and was the winning pitcher in Game 4 of the NL division series over Philadelphia.

"Today's game was just very disappointing and embarrassing," Jackson said. "Your club is in a pennant race and you have a game like that, it definitely leaves a bitter taste in your mouth that you did absolutely nothing to give your team a chance to win."

Jackson said returning for the first time to the city he helped win a World Series had nothing to do with his woes.

"That didn't have any effect at all," Jackson said. "No pressure, no added emotions or anything like that."

The Cardinals topped six runs for the first time since beating the Nationals 10-9 on Sept. 1 on the road. Their run total was the most allowed by Washington this season.

Manager Davey Johnson conceded before the bottom of the fifth when he took out four regulars, including 1-2-3 hitters Jayson Werth, Bryce Harper and Ryan Zimmerman. He pulled two more starters in the middle of the sixth, and in the bottom of the seventh only seventh-place hitter Danny Espinosa remained in the lineup, although not at his original position after moving from second base to shortstop earlier.

Matheny took out Molina and Carlos Beltran after seven innings. A third starter, Matt Holliday, was removed after getting hit by a pitch on the left elbow by Christian Garcia in the sixth. The team said Holliday had a contusion and was day to day.

"Everything came back pretty negative, but it's a bad spot," Matheny said. "I don't care if you hit it on the bone, a ball thrown that hard, that's a bad spot."

A few minutes later in his postgame news conference, Matheny had a much brighter outlook, saying, "To me, Matt Holliday's going to get locked in here any day."

LaRoche drove in his 99th run in the first, but that cushion didn't last long for Washington.

The first five Cardinals hitters scored and the first seven reached safely with the help of a late throw on a forceout attempt by shortstop Ian Desmond and a fielding error by third baseman Ryan Zimmerman, trying for a force at the plate on Molina's slow roller with the bases loaded.

Craig's RBI single and Daniel Descalso's sacrifice fly with the bases loaded, the first out of the inning, were the only hard-hit balls in a five-run first. In 30 starts, Jackson has allowed 25 runs on 36 hits and 18 walks in the first.

Jon Jay doubled to open the four-run second. Craig got another RBI single ahead of Molina's 22nd homer into the visitor's bullpen in left and Jackson was yanked after walking Beltran for the second time.

Jackson matched his season worst with eight earned runs allowed, failed to strike out anyone for the first time this year, and threw two wild pitches after entering his 30th start with just one all season. He has allowed 25 runs in the first inning.